Is Color Photography an Art?

There is an ongoing debate about whether color photography is an art form, or
simply a craft. In the arts community, the decision as to whether a form of
expression is an art rests with museums and art critics. For museum curators, it
is widely accepted that black-and-white photography reached the level of art
with the work of Ansel Adams. I have studied his work and writings, along with that of other great photographers. What he accomplished in the world of black-and-white photography
stands as something to work toward in my chosen medium of color. Some
famous color photographers whose work I admire are Eliot Porter, Charles Cramer,
and David Muench.

While black-and-white photography from the best photographers has been
collected and exhibited on the level of fine-art paintings, color photography has been a different matter. Since it arrived later than
black-and-white, it is still in the process of becoming accepted by museums as a
legitimate art form. The earliest color processes had poor color reproduction
and were limited as a means of expression; also they had limited archival
stability. This early history contributed to a skepticism toward acceptance of
color photos as art. Since color photos often attempt to reflect the reality of
a scene many art critics view them as merely documentary, not expressive.

Museum curators often focus on the abovementioned fact that color photographs
have a shorter archival life than properly prepared black-and-white
images. While true, high-quality color inkjet and optical prints have a
lifetime of 100 years or more when stored properly. Furthermore, many
recognized art forms have much shorter lifetimes. Performance art and
mixed media collage are two examples. Now that photography is moving
toward digital representation, in theory a color photograph can have an infinite
lifetime it there is available technology to view and print it.

Fundamentally, art is the communication of emotion. Color has played an
important role throughout history in such communication. As art evolved
from primitive times, one of the first innovations was the use of color in
sculpture, jewelry, and painting. A photograph of a red rose evokes
love. That simple option isn't available to a black-and-white photographer
who wants to express this emotion. Anyone in the upper echelons of
the art establishment who denies that color photographs cannot be as expressive
as black-and-white ones is denying this simple fact (unless that person happens
to be severely color-blind and cannot see color at all.)

Since a color photographer is writing this, you already suspect my answer.
The color photographer has many means of bringing expression into a scene; the
selection of camera position, lens focal length, use of filters, depth of field,
film type, exposure, composition, and shutter speed all figure into the image
that is produced. During printing, the color photographer has control of
contrast, density, color balance, and saturation to convey personal expression.
Beyond these technical considerations there is the type of
lighting, weather conditions, choice of subject, timing, and ability to
"see" a photograph rendered on film and in the final print before
setting up a camera. This skill is something Adams called
"pre-visualization". The ability to pre-visualize a photograph applies
equally to black-and-white and color processes. Pre-visualization involves
an intimate understanding of the characteristics of light, the film, chemistry, and
printing paper, so that a photographer is able to use exposure, development, and
other techniques to control the process of recording a scene on film in a way
that preserves the visual information of the scene that is desired to be
expressed in the print.

On a similar level to pre-visualization, I believe, is the ability to
anticipate a photograph, that is, to pre-visualize a scene before it happens.
For the large-format camera where setup times can be as long as 30 minutes this
is a critically important talent. Although Ansel Adams and other famous
black-and-white photographers don't discuss anticipation it is clear from their
work that they had this ability.

Two other important innovations Adams pioneered are customized film
development to control contrast, and the Zone System, a system of exposure
measurement useful in the process of pre-visualization. While custom development
applies to color photography in only very limited ways, the Zone System is quite
useful. It is hard to believe that custom development could be the one thing
that defines black-and-white photography as an art, and sets it apart from color
in this regard.

Most people assume color film is fundamentally different from black-and-white
film and by its nature unsuited to the kinds of exposure and contrast
manipulations black-and-white photographers practice. That couldn't be further
from the truth. Color film evolved from black-and-white film, and in reality
consists of three separate images: a blue image, a green image, and a red one,
sandwiched together. Some modern films have additional color layers. Each of
these color layers can be thought of as a separate black-and-white image. In
fact, many black-and-white photographers (Adams included) then and now, take
photos with red, green, yellow, or blue filters under certain conditions to
change the appearance of the image recorded on film. They are practicing a
portion of the process that happens today with color film.

Let's look at a color photograph and the component red, green, and blue
images. These images are easily
examined in a scan of the film as shown below:

A color photographer has the ability to manipulate the contrast and exposure
of the three images independently. The finest color photographers often use
color masks as a tool to achieve control of the printed image. Such masking is a
painstaking process and fraught with more effort than the custom exposure
and development techniques for black-and-white negatives that Adams pioneered.
Fortunately, with the arrival of digital technology color masking can easily be
done in Photoshop with none of the problems the technique had in the wet
chemical darkroom.

Seen from this perspective there is essentially no difference between the
work a color photographer does to create an image versus the black-and-white
photographer. Indeed, the color photographer's job can be seen as three times as difficult
since there are three different monochrome images to keep track of in managing
the perception of color.

Beyond that, it is even possible to create entirely new black-and-white images from the three color layers in film by combining them in
different ways. The resulting black-and-white photo isn't color, but it couldn't be
created without the use of color film (or by taking three separate
black-and-white images through colored filters.) The example below shows
one of an infinite number of possible combinations of the red, green, and blue
layers of the film, along with selective contrast and brightness manipulation in
different parts of the image to produce an expressive result:

In this example, I created a Channel Mixer layer in
Photoshop, set it to monochrome mode, then combined 67 percent of the red channel,
65 percent of the green channel, and subtracted 22 percent of the blue channel
. I increased the contrast of the sky and distant mountain, and darkened
the foreground slope with the flowers to produce a final image.

While my black-and-white version of Individuality is
something I would gladly print and hang on my wall, what sets the color image
apart is the red Indian Paintbrush flower in the foreground. It is the
real subject of the image and expresses the message I wanted to
communicate. There is no way to produce a black-and-white print that
communicates the same message because red, when rendered in black and white, is
not a tonality that catches the eye when surrounded by white flowers. So
it's clear from this example that color provides an expressive option that is
unavailable to the black-and-white photographer.

Many beautiful color photographs are equally beautiful in monochrome. So a
color photographer often sees in black-and-white as well, though the choice may
not be a conscious one. Certainly there are differences and some color photos
are not appealing in their monochrome versions, but the fact that the original
scene was in color to begin with means that it likely looked good in color when
a black-and-white photographer saw it!

Evidence is one thing; acceptance in the critical and museum communities is
another. I believe color photography is art. It has become widely accepted in publishing and
consumers purchase millions of color images in books, magazines, cards, posters, and prints
each year. There are many galleries that exhibit only color
photography. Color photographers continue to express their art in the hope that
critical acceptance will someday follow. I believe it to be more a matter of
time than of waiting for a person like Ansel Adams to create an equivalent
breakthrough in the medium of color. There are many excellent color
photographers that have already created great and timeless images and are
helping pave the way toward recognition for all of us who work in the field. I hope this
discussion has opened up insights for the reader about the relevance of color
photography as a means of artistic expression.

For my own
work, I have chosen to follow where my vision takes me and not to fight a battle
of critical acceptance. To fight for acceptance would bring the desires of
critics and museums into my creative process. I am not here for them. I am here
for nature, and to show people what nature has to say is at the heart of my
work.